Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Cindy Sheehan sticks it to the Democratic Party

I've never been a big fan of peace advocate Cindy Sheehan. I agree with most of what she says so it must be a personality issue... But she is "resigning" as the "face of the peace movement" to spend time with family and get away from politics.

Who can blame her?

But her farewell letter is poignant and targeted at the Democrats who abandoned the peace cause. She has this to say:

I am deemed a radical because I believe that partisan politics should be left to the wayside when hundreds of thousands of people are dying for a war based on lies that is supported by Democrats and Republican alike. It amazes me that people who are sharp on the issues and can zero in like a laser beam on lies, misrepresentations, and political expediency when it comes to one party refuse to recognize it in their own party. Blind party loyalty is dangerous whatever side it occurs on. People of the world look on us Americans as jokes because we allow our political leaders so much murderous latitude and if we don’t find alternatives to this corrupt "two" party system our Representative Republic will die and be replaced with what we are rapidly descending into with nary a check or balance: a fascist corporate wasteland. I am demonized because I don’t see party affiliation or nationality when I look at a person, I see that person’s heart. If someone looks, dresses, acts, talks and votes like a Republican, then why do they deserve support just because he/she calls him/herself a Democrat?

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I hope Ben Affleck's wrong

Ben Affleck picks Mitt Romney to win the GOP nomination.

Let's hope he's as wrong as he was when he thought Reindeer Games was a good idea.

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A real "Law and Order" candidate

Fred Thompson, former senator and current star of NBC's hit TV show Law and Order, is running for president.

A tough-talking southerner (at least he plays one on TV), many predict Thompson to be the darling of the southern vote – a role that no current GOP candidate fills to the liking of our confederate loving friends down south.

But as the most recent edition of Rolling Stone points out, this is a guy who left the Senate because it was too much work. I guess running for president is easy breezy.

... On a side note, though, he plans to rely heavily on the Internet to run his campaign – probably because he already gets plenty of TV exposure by the seemingly 24/7 reruns of Law and Order. But it might be a good gauge of the power of the net in politics... If that southern base of his can figure out how to turn on a computer (I'm kidding South, don't yell at me).

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Oh Kobe...

After turning the Lakers into "his team" by exerting pressure to get rid of Shaq, followed by a few years of sub-par Laker basketball, Kobe Bryan wants out of LA.

Kobe made his bed, but like a baby, he doesn't want to sleep in it. As someone who has stood up for him in the past, it's a little sad to see it go this way.

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Sunday, May 27, 2007

Ill Poetic live from the Taste of Cincinnati

Walking through the taste of Cincinnati and stumbled upon Ill Poetic. I got lucky. And you got lucky I had a camera to share it with you.



*****If you haven't noticed, the audio cuts out halfway through the video. I'll have to fix this when I get back to Cincinnati tomorrow.*****

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Interview with a new council candidate

Find more information on Steven Pavelish @ www.pavelish.com.

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Best food at Taste of Cincinnati

The best and only vegan food at Taste of Cincinnati was found at Shanghai Mama's.

Their mango spring rolls and edamae were killer. I'm going to try their real restaurant now... I'm sure it's even better than their overpriced booth food.

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Naked Cowboy plugs the mothership

Taste of Cincinnati is all sorts of fun. Even New York City's naked cowboy shows up (native of Cincinnati I believe).

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Tom Green memories

Courtesy of the Dean:

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Saturday, May 26, 2007

You might be a redneck... if you're an 11 year old kid shooting giant pigs

Read the hate mail sent to that gun-toting 11-year-old. They even host it on their own site.

Here are some of my favorites:

Congratulations. By breaking the 6th commandment you've earned your spot in hell. Luckily not all America is like this, fat kids with guns killing innocent beasts -- and allowing Satan to delude them into believing they are doing God's work. Today I pray for your soul.

Fuck the bible and fuck the fat red neck killer kid and all you red neck hillbillies good for nothing dumb ass scums.

FUCK YOU YOU FUCKING IDIOT!!!!!!!!! WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YOU?? YOU LITTLE FAT ASS PUNK!!! THINK YOUR SO COOL CUZ YOU SHOT A HUGE PIG! JUST BECAUSE IT WAS DIFFERENT FROM OTHER PIGS DOESNT MEAN THAT IT DOESNT HAVE A LIFE, A MATE, A FAMILY!!!! HOW WOULD U LIKE IT IF U WERE KILLED FOR NO REASON OTHER THAN UR FAT!?! I WOULD SURE BE HAPPY!


In my opinion the family deserves all the comments coming their way. Keep in mind they shot the animal with a handgun for a period of three hours... As if it wasn't good enough to just kill it; they had to do it slow.

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Hunters are a joke

Look at the lowest form of life (the boy, not the animal):

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Why people continue to accept hunting in America is beyond me. Why people give fame to some bumfuck Alabama bitch-boy is a mystery I'll never solve.

Congratulations on destroying an innocent natural wonder.

Read about the boy at his aptly titled Web site, Monsterpig.com.

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Pirates of The Caribbean... Meh

I could write a review of the summer blockbuster, but I think this one has it covered.

Highlights:

Despite its bum-numbing running time, Pirates 3 can barely keep up with the cast of characters we're supposedly rooting for - the upside of which is that Orlando Bloom is relegated to the bit-part status he deserves.

That just leaves Depp to stop the ship sinking. Only he doesn't. Within minutes it becomes horrifyingly apparent that two films was more than enough of Johnny's Cap'n Jack shtick. And, while he does provide a smattering of humorous lines, more often than not he's just plain irritating, especially when they have him chuntering away to his imaginary selves.


As I was reading through some of the reviews this morning (after seeing it last night), one thing is baffling me...

From Hollywood.com:

The movie’s long but definitely worth its weight in gold doubloons, giving just a whiff of possibility to a fourth one.


Anyone that's seen this movie knows they left us with more than a "whiff of possibility to a fourth one." Much like the end of the second, they practically used the conclusion to start the next film. For some reason, more than one critic missed the VERY heavy handed foretelling of another sequeal.

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Democrats make fun of transvestites

The party of acceptance and diversity is at it again.

Over at As Ohio Goes there is a post calling Giuliani crazy and it mockingly includes a picture from when Giuliani dressed like a woman (in a funny sketch).

Democrats will persist to belittle transvestites as long as it helps their cause. All the while I'm sure they'll be the ones who pretend to embrace diversity.

Instead of commending Giuliani for being comfortable in his own skin and having a sense of humor, Democrats continue to make dressing like a woman a mark of shame – apparently with no regard to the rich cultural tradition in comedy that Giuliani was paying homage to or the feelings of those who cross-dress for their own well-being.

Democrats new slogan in '08: Pruder and meaner than Republicans. Watch us make fun of transvestites!

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Friday, May 25, 2007

Texas Toast



More from Molly Sullivan at her MySpace.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

More on muni wi-fi

Dave Menninger continues the discussion over at his blog.

I will be the first to admit that there are good reasons to be for and against municipal wifi. I happen to be in favor of it. But the most important thing is that people don't start throwing around arguments and citations that don't make sense.


The only thing I'm not sure of is what the good reasons to be against municipal wifi are...I suppose I could just be blinded by my love of technology...

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Ohio government bows down to CCV

Ted Strickland almost seemed like a reasonable man when he originally expressed concern over the constitutionality of the heavily restrictive strip-club bill proposed by Cincinnati's Citizens for Community Values. He even went as far to call the bill a "frivolous issue" saying that we need to focus on job creation, blah blah blah.

But when the money was on the table, Ted Strickland took the coward's way out and chose to "let the bill become law." The governor has three main options when considering a law: sign it and it becomes law, veto it and send it back to the legislature or the coward's route (Ted's route) which is not taking a stance and letting it become law (essentially signing it without the fanfare).

Ted could have made a bold statement about his stance on the right to free expression or his desire to focus on less "frivolous" issues by smacking a veto on this terd of a law... but of course he didn't. He took the "safe" route. And while he claims he wants to focus on job creation and the economy, allowing this bill to become law only stands to cut jobs and take a huge chunk of money out of Ohio (as exhibited in the Plain Dealer's article titled "Strip Clubs lap up visitors' money").

A politician who says one thing and does the other is never sits easy with me. But it's all you fools out there that put him into office. Not me.

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Saturday, May 19, 2007

Charter starting to look REAL stupid

Joe Wessels and the Cincinnati Post have picked up on the ongoing saga of the Charter Committee and the Cincinnati Beacon.

For those who don't know, the Dean of Cincinnati was denied membership to the Charter Party (Cincinnati's third party) due to the fact he was a blogger. The Dean of Cincinnati, knowing this rule was bunk, cried fould– Charter of course has had a candidate (Nick Spencer) who was a blogger and another candidate who was a TV newscaster.

One comment in Wessels' column provoked some thought:

Haap was rejected, according to Jeff Cramerding, Charter's executive director, because he is a journalist. Cramerding said that people can be a partisan or a journalist, but not both. "We thought we were doing him a favor," he said of Haap. "It would be a conflict of interest if he's a journalist."


Cramerding's comment is silly off-the-cuff rationalization. News organizations set their own limits on their reporters' political lives. I've heard of some newspapers who won't let their political reporters vote. I've heard other journalism veterans say that reporters' personal lives are their own business.

Political life is obviously a part of a person's private life.

What I've never heard is a party (or a committee that acts as a party) set such restrictive rules on membership. Cramerding's comments are sweeping in such a way that show very little thought. Why you ask? Writers for publications like The New Republic or Mother Jones are journalists, right? But they're also obviously partisan. Does the Democratic Party kick them out?

I imagine that's something Cramerding knows, but didn't think of under the gun.

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City council a little slow to respond

It's pretty sad that David Crowley has been the only one to respond promptly to my concerns. After all, I am a voter and my question was pretty simple.

We'll see if they keep dragging their feet.

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